Library Catalog
Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Understanding Celtic religion : revisiting the pagan past / edited by Katja Ritari and Alexandra Bergholm.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: New approaches to Celtic religion and mythologyPublisher: Cardiff : University of Wales Press, 2015Copyright date: ©2015Description: 1 online resource (181 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781783167937
  • 1783167939
  • 1783167920
  • 9781783167920
  • 9781783168613
  • 1783168617
  • 9781783167944
  • 1783167947
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Understanding Celtic Religion : Revisiting the Pagan Past.DDC classification:
  • 299/.94 23
LOC classification:
  • BL432
Other classification:
  • online - EBSCO
Online resources:
Contents:
1 Introduction: 'Celtic Religion': Is this a Valid Concept? / Alexandra Bergholm and Katja Ritari --2 Celtic Spells and Counterspells / Jacqueline Borsje -- 3 The Old Gods of Ireland in the Later Middle Ages / John Carey -- 4 Staging the Otherworld in Medieval Irish Tradition / Joseph Falaky Nagy -- 5 The Biblical Dimension of Early Medieval Latin Texts / Thomas O'Loughlin -- 6 Ancient Irish Law Revisited: Rereading the Laws of Status and Franchise / Robin Chapman Stacey -- 7 A Dirty Window on the Iron Age? Recent Developments in the Archaeology of Pre-Roman Celtic Religion / Jane Webster.
Summary: Although it has long been acknowledged that the early Irish literary corpus preserves both pre-Christian and Christian elements, the challenges involved in the understanding of these different strata have not been subjected to critical examination. This volume draws attention to the importance of reconsidering the relationship between religion and mythology, as well as the concept of 'Celtic religion' itself. When scholars are attempting to construct the so-called 'Celtic' belief system, what counts as 'religion'? Or, when labelling something as 'religion' as opposed to 'mythology', what do these entities entail? This volume is the first interdisciplinary collection of articles which critically reevaluates the methodological challenges of the study of 'Celtic religion'; the authors are eminent scholars in the field of Celtic Studies representing the disciplines of theology, literary studies, history, law and archaeology, and the book represents a significant contribution to the present scholarly debate concerning the pre-Christian elements in early medieval source materials.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Vendor-supplied metadata.

1 Introduction: 'Celtic Religion': Is this a Valid Concept? / Alexandra Bergholm and Katja Ritari --2 Celtic Spells and Counterspells / Jacqueline Borsje -- 3 The Old Gods of Ireland in the Later Middle Ages / John Carey -- 4 Staging the Otherworld in Medieval Irish Tradition / Joseph Falaky Nagy -- 5 The Biblical Dimension of Early Medieval Latin Texts / Thomas O'Loughlin -- 6 Ancient Irish Law Revisited: Rereading the Laws of Status and Franchise / Robin Chapman Stacey -- 7 A Dirty Window on the Iron Age? Recent Developments in the Archaeology of Pre-Roman Celtic Religion / Jane Webster.

Although it has long been acknowledged that the early Irish literary corpus preserves both pre-Christian and Christian elements, the challenges involved in the understanding of these different strata have not been subjected to critical examination. This volume draws attention to the importance of reconsidering the relationship between religion and mythology, as well as the concept of 'Celtic religion' itself. When scholars are attempting to construct the so-called 'Celtic' belief system, what counts as 'religion'? Or, when labelling something as 'religion' as opposed to 'mythology', what do these entities entail? This volume is the first interdisciplinary collection of articles which critically reevaluates the methodological challenges of the study of 'Celtic religion'; the authors are eminent scholars in the field of Celtic Studies representing the disciplines of theology, literary studies, history, law and archaeology, and the book represents a significant contribution to the present scholarly debate concerning the pre-Christian elements in early medieval source materials.